Table of Contents
finallyThe Java Virtual Machine machine is designed to support the Java programming language. Oracle's JDK software contains a compiler from source code written in the Java programming language to the instruction set of the Java Virtual Machine, and a run-time system that implements the Java Virtual Machine itself. Understanding how one compiler utilizes the Java Virtual Machine is useful to the prospective compiler writer, as well as to one trying to understand the Java Virtual Machine itself. The numbered sections in this chapter are not normative.
Note that the term "compiler" is sometimes used when referring to a translator from the instruction set of the Java Virtual Machine to the instruction set of a specific CPU. One example of such a translator is a just-in-time (JIT) code generator, which generates platform-specific instructions only after Java Virtual Machine code has been loaded. This chapter does not address issues associated with code generation, only those associated with compiling source code written in the Java programming language to Java Virtual Machine instructions.
This chapter consists mainly
of examples of source code together with annotated listings of the
Java Virtual Machine code that the javac compiler in Oracle’s JDK
release 1.0.2 generates for the examples. The Java Virtual Machine code is written in
the informal “virtual machine assembly language” output by
Oracle's javap utility, distributed with the JDK
release. You can use javap to generate additional
examples of compiled methods.
The format of the examples should be familiar to anyone who has read assembly code. Each instruction takes the form:
<index> <opcode> [ <operand1> [ <operand2>... ]] [<comment>]
The
<index> is the index of the opcode of the
instruction in the array that contains the bytes of Java Virtual Machine code for
this method. Alternatively, the <index> may
be thought of as a byte offset from the beginning of the
method. The <opcode> is the mnemonic for the
instruction's opcode, and the zero or
more <operandN> are the operands of the
instruction. The optional <comment> is given
in end-of-line comment syntax:
8 bipush 100 // Push int constant 100
Some of the material in the
comments is emitted by javap; the rest is supplied
by the authors. The <index> prefacing each
instruction may be used as the target of a control transfer
instruction. For instance, a goto
8 instruction transfers control to the
instruction at index 8. Note that the actual operands of Java Virtual Machine control
transfer instructions are offsets from the addresses of the opcodes of
those instructions; these operands are displayed
by javap (and are shown in this chapter) as more
easily read offsets into their methods.
We preface an operand representing a run-time constant pool index with a hash sign and follow the instruction by a comment identifying the run-time constant pool item referenced, as in:
10 ldc #1 // Pushfloatconstant100.0
9 invokevirtual #4 // Method Example.addTwo(II)I
For the purposes of this chapter, we do not worry about specifying details such as operand sizes.
Java Virtual Machine code exhibits a set of general characteristics imposed by the Java Virtual Machine's design and use of types. In the first example we encounter many of these, and we consider them in some detail.
The spin
method simply spins around an empty for loop 100 times:
void spin() {
int i;
for (i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
; // Loop body is empty
}
}
A compiler might
compile spin to:
0 iconst_0 // Push int constant 0 1 istore_1 // Store into local variable 1 (i=0) 2 goto 8 // First time through don't increment 5 iinc 1 1 // Increment local variable 1 by 1 (i++) 8 iload_1 // Push local variable 1 (i) 9 bipush 100 // Push int constant 100 11 if_icmplt 5 // Compare and loop if less than (i < 100) 14 return // Return void when done
The Java Virtual Machine is stack-oriented, with most operations taking one or more operands from the operand stack of the Java Virtual Machine's current frame or pushing results back onto the operand stack. A new frame is created each time a method is invoked, and with it is created a new operand stack and set of local variables for use by that method (§2.6). At any one point of the computation, there are thus likely to be many frames and equally many operand stacks per thread of control, corresponding to many nested method invocations. Only the operand stack in the current frame is active.
The instruction set of the
Java Virtual Machine distinguishes operand types by using distinct bytecodes for
operations on its various data types. The
method spin operates only on values of type
int. The instructions in its compiled code chosen to operate on
typed data (iconst_0, istore_1, iinc, iload_1, if_icmplt)
are all specialized for type int.
The two constants
in spin, 0
and 100, are pushed onto the operand stack using
two different instructions. The 0 is pushed using
an iconst_0 instruction, one of the family of iconst_<i>
instructions. The 100 is pushed using a bipush
instruction, which fetches the value it pushes as an immediate
operand.
The Java Virtual Machine frequently takes
advantage of the likelihood of certain operands (int
constants -1, 0,
1, 2, 3,
4 and 5 in the case of the
iconst_<i> instructions) by making those operands implicit in the
opcode. Because the iconst_0 instruction knows it is going to push
an int 0, iconst_0 does not need to store an operand to tell
it what value to push, nor does it need to fetch or decode an
operand. Compiling the push of 0 as
bipush 0 would have been correct, but would
have made the compiled code for spin one byte
longer. A simple virtual machine would have also spent additional time
fetching and decoding the explicit operand each time around the
loop. Use of implicit operands makes compiled code more compact and
efficient.
The int i
in spin is stored as Java Virtual Machine local variable
1. Because most Java Virtual Machine instructions operate on
values popped from the operand stack rather than directly on local
variables, instructions that transfer values between local variables
and the operand stack are common in code compiled for the Java Virtual Machine. These
operations also have special support in the instruction
set. In spin, values are transferred to and from
local variables using the istore_1 and iload_1 instructions, each
of which implicitly operates on local
variable 1. The istore_1 instruction pops an
int from the operand stack and stores it in local
variable 1. The iload_1 instruction pushes the
value in local variable 1 on to the operand
stack.
The use (and reuse) of local variables is the responsibility of the compiler writer. The specialized load and store instructions should encourage the compiler writer to reuse local variables as much as is feasible. The resulting code is faster, more compact, and uses less space in the frame.
Certain very frequent
operations on local variables are catered to specially by the
Java Virtual Machine. The iinc instruction increments the contents of a local
variable by a one-byte signed value. The iinc instruction
in spin increments the first local variable (its
first operand) by 1 (its second operand). The
iinc instruction is very handy when implementing looping
constructs.
The for
loop of spin is accomplished mainly by these
instructions:
5 iinc 1 1 // Increment local variable 1 by 1 (i++) 8 iload_1 // Push local variable 1 (i) 9 bipush 100 // Push int constant 100 11 if_icmplt 5 // Compare and loop if less than (i < 100)
The bipush instruction
pushes the value 100 onto the operand stack as an
int, then the if_icmplt instruction pops that value off the
operand stack and compares it against i. If the
comparison succeeds (the variable i is less
than 100), control is transferred to
index 5 and the next iteration of the for loop
begins. Otherwise, control passes to the instruction following the
if_icmplt.
If the spin
example had used a data type other than int for the loop counter,
the compiled code would necessarily change to reflect the different
data type. For instance, if instead of an int
the spin example uses a double, as shown:
void dspin() {
double i;
for (i = 0.0; i < 100.0; i++) {
; // Loop body is empty
}
}
Method void dspin() 0 dconst_0 // Push double constant 0.0 1 dstore_1 // Store into local variables 1 and 2 2 goto 9 // First time through don't increment 5 dload_1 // Push local variables 1 and 2 6 dconst_1 // Push double constant 1.0 7 dadd // Add; there is no dinc instruction 8 dstore_1 // Store result in local variables 1 and 2 9 dload_1 // Push local variables 1 and 2 10 ldc2_w #4 // Push double constant 100.0 13 dcmpg // There is no if_dcmplt instruction 14 iflt 5 // Compare and loop if less than (i < 100.0) 17 return // Return void when done
The instructions that operate
on typed data are now specialized for type double. (The ldc2_w
instruction will be discussed later in this chapter.)
Recall that double values
occupy two local variables, although they are only accessed using the
lesser index of the two local variables. This is also the case for
values of type long. Again for example,
double doubleLocals(double d1, double d2) {
return d1 + d2;
}
Method double doubleLocals(double,double) 0 dload_1 // First argument in local variables 1 and 2 1 dload_3 // Second argument in local variables 3 and 4 2 dadd 3 dreturn
Note that local variables of
the local variable pairs used to store double values
in doubleLocals must never be manipulated
individually.
The Java Virtual Machine's opcode size of 1 byte results in its compiled code being very compact. However, 1-byte opcodes also mean that the Java Virtual Machine instruction set must stay small. As a compromise, the Java Virtual Machine does not provide equal support for all data types: it is not completely orthogonal (Table 2.11.1-A).
For example, the comparison of
values of type int in the for statement of
example spin can be implemented using a single
if_icmplt instruction; however, there is no single instruction in
the Java Virtual Machine instruction set that performs a conditional branch on values
of type double. Thus, dspin must implement its
comparison of values of type double using a dcmpg instruction
followed by an iflt instruction.
The Java Virtual Machine provides the most
direct support for data of type int. This is partly in anticipation
of efficient implementations of the Java Virtual Machine's operand stacks and local
variable arrays. It is also motivated by the frequency of int data
in typical programs. Other integral types have less direct
support. There are no byte, char, or short versions of the
store, load, or add instructions, for instance. Here is
the spin example written using a short:
void sspin() {
short i;
for (i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
; // Loop body is empty
}
}
It must be compiled for the
Java Virtual Machine, as follows, using instructions operating on another type, most
likely int, converting between short and int values as necessary
to ensure that the results of operations on short data stay within
the appropriate range:
Method void sspin() 0 iconst_0 1 istore_1 2 goto 10 5 iload_1 // The short is treated as though an int 6 iconst_1 7 iadd 8 i2s // Truncate int to short 9 istore_1 10 iload_1 11 bipush 100 13 if_icmplt 5 16 return
The lack of direct support for
byte, char, and short types in the Java Virtual Machine is not particularly
painful, because values of those types are internally promoted to
int (byte and short are sign-extended to int, char is
zero-extended). Operations on byte, char, and short data can
thus be done using int instructions. The only additional cost is
that of truncating the values of int operations to valid
ranges.
The long and floating-point
types have an intermediate level of support in the Java Virtual Machine, lacking only
the full complement of conditional control transfer
instructions.
The Java Virtual Machine generally does
arithmetic on its operand stack. (The exception is the iinc
instruction, which directly increments the value of a local variable.)
For instance, the align2grain method aligns an
int value to a given power of 2:
int align2grain(int i, int grain) {
return ((i + grain-1) & ~(grain-1));
}
Operands for arithmetic
operations are popped from the operand stack, and the results of
operations are pushed back onto the operand stack. Results of
arithmetic subcomputations can thus be made available as operands of
their nesting computation. For instance, the calculation
of ~(grain-1) is handled by these
instructions:
5 iload_2 // Push grain 6 iconst_1 // Push int constant 1 7 isub // Subtract; push result 8 iconst_m1 // Push int constant -1 9 ixor // Do XOR; push result
First grain-1 is calculated
using the contents of local variable 2 and an
immediate int value 1. These operands are popped from the
operand stack and their difference pushed back onto the operand
stack. The difference is thus immediately available for use as one
operand of the ixor instruction. (Recall that ~x ==
-1^x.) Similarly, the result of the ixor instruction
becomes an operand for the subsequent iand instruction.
The code for the entire method follows:
Method int align2grain(int,int) 0 iload_1 1 iload_2 2 iadd 3 iconst_1 4 isub 5 iload_2 6 iconst_1 7 isub 8 iconst_m1 9 ixor 10 iand 11 ireturn
Many numeric constants, as
well as objects, fields, and methods, are accessed via the run-time
constant pool of the current class. Object access is considered later
(§3.8). Data of types int, long, float,
and double, as well as references to instances of class String,
are managed using the ldc, ldc_w, and ldc2_w
instructions.
The ldc and ldc_w
instructions are used to access values in the run-time constant pool
(including instances of class String) of types other than double
and long. The ldc_w instruction is used in place of ldc only
when there is a large number of run-time constant pool items and a
larger index is needed to access an item. The ldc2_w instruction is
used to access all values of types double and long; there is no
non-wide variant.
Integral constants of types
byte, char, or short, as well as small int values, may be
compiled using the bipush, sipush, or iconst_<i> instructions
(§3.2). Certain small floating-point constants
may be compiled using the fconst_<f> and dconst_<d>
instructions.
In all of these cases, compilation is straightforward. For instance, the constants for:
void useManyNumeric() {
int i = 100;
int j = 1000000;
long l1 = 1;
long l2 = 0xffffffff;
double d = 2.2;
...do some calculations...
}
Method void useManyNumeric() 0 bipush 100 // Push small int constant with bipush 2 istore_1 3 ldc #1 // Push large int constant (1000000) with ldc 5 istore_2 6 lconst_1 // A tiny long value uses small fast lconst_1 7 lstore_3 8 ldc2_w #6 // Push long 0xffffffff (that is, an int -1) // Any long constant value can be pushed with ldc2_w 11 lstore 5 13 ldc2_w #8 // Push double constant 2.200000 // Uncommon double values are also pushed with ldc2_w 16 dstore 7 ...do those calculations...
Compilation of for
statements was shown in an earlier section
(§3.2). Most of the Java programming language's other control
constructs (if-then-else, do, while, break,
and continue) are also compiled in the obvious ways. The compilation
of switch statements is handled in a separate section
(§3.10), as are the compilation of exceptions
(§3.12) and the compilation of finally clauses
(§3.13).
As a further example, a
while loop is compiled in an obvious way, although the specific
control transfer instructions made available by the Java Virtual Machine vary by data
type. As usual, there is more support for data of type int, for
example:
void whileInt() {
int i = 0;
while (i < 100) {
i++;
}
}
Method void whileInt() 0 iconst_0 1 istore_1 2 goto 8 5 iinc 1 1 8 iload_1 9 bipush 100 11 if_icmplt 5 14 return
Note that the test of the
while statement (implemented using the if_icmplt instruction) is
at the bottom of the Java Virtual Machine code for the loop. (This was also the case
in the spin examples earlier.) The test being at
the bottom of the loop forces the use of a goto instruction to get
to the test prior to the first iteration of the loop. If that test
fails, and the loop body is never entered, this extra instruction is
wasted. However, while loops are typically used when their body is
expected to be run, often for many iterations. For subsequent
iterations, putting the test at the bottom of the loop saves a Java Virtual Machine
instruction each time around the loop: if the test were at the top of
the loop, the loop body would need a trailing goto instruction to
get back to the top.
Control constructs involving other data types are compiled in similar ways, but must use the instructions available for those data types. This leads to somewhat less efficient code because more Java Virtual Machine instructions are needed, for example:
void whileDouble() {
double i = 0.0;
while (i < 100.1) {
i++;
}
}
Method void whileDouble() 0 dconst_0 1 dstore_1 2 goto 9 5 dload_1 6 dconst_1 7 dadd 8 dstore_1 9 dload_1 10 ldc2_w #4 // Push double constant 100.1 13 dcmpg // To compare and branch we have to use... 14 iflt 5 // ...two instructions 17 return
Each floating-point type has
two comparison instructions: fcmpl and fcmpg for type float, and
dcmpl and dcmpg for type double. The variants differ only in
their treatment of NaN. NaN is unordered
(§2.3.2), so all floating-point comparisons fail
if either of their operands is NaN. The compiler chooses the variant
of the comparison instruction for the appropriate type that produces
the same result whether the comparison fails on non-NaN values or
encounters a NaN. For instance:
int lessThan100(double d) {
if (d < 100.0) {
return 1;
} else {
return -1;
}
}
Method int lessThan100(double) 0 dload_1 1 ldc2_w #4 // Push double constant 100.0 4 dcmpg // Push 1 if d is NaN or d > 100.0; // push 0 if d == 100.0 5 ifge 10 // Branch on 0 or 1 8 iconst_1 9 ireturn 10 iconst_m1 11 ireturn
If d is not
NaN and is less than 100.0, the dcmpg instruction
pushes an int -1 onto the operand stack, and
the ifge instruction does not branch. Whether d
is greater than 100.0 or is NaN, the dcmpg
instruction pushes an int 1 onto the operand
stack, and the ifge branches. If d is equal to
100.0, the dcmpg instruction pushes an
int 0 onto the operand stack, and the ifge
branches.
The dcmpl instruction achieves the same effect if the comparison is reversed:
int greaterThan100(double d) {
if (d > 100.0) {
return 1;
} else {
return -1;
}
}
Method int greaterThan100(double) 0 dload_1 1 ldc2_w #4 // Push double constant 100.0 4 dcmpl // Push -1 if d is NaN or d < 100.0; // push 0 if d == 100.0 5 ifle 10 // Branch on 0 or -1 8 iconst_1 9 ireturn 10 iconst_m1 11 ireturn
Once again, whether the
comparison fails on a non-NaN value or because it is passed a NaN, the
dcmpl instruction pushes an int value onto the operand stack that
causes the ifle to branch. If both of the dcmp
instructions did not exist, one of the example methods would have had
to do more work to detect NaN.
If n arguments are passed to an instance method, they are received, by convention, in the local variables numbered 1 through n of the frame created for the new method invocation. The arguments are received in the order they were passed. For example:
int addTwo(int i, int j) {
return i + j;
}
Method int addTwo(int,int) 0 iload_1 // Push value of local variable 1 (i) 1 iload_2 // Push value of local variable 2 (j) 2 iadd // Add; leave int result on operand stack 3 ireturn // Return int result
By convention, an instance
method is passed a reference to its instance in local
variable 0. In the Java programming language the instance is
accessible via the this keyword.
Class (static) methods do
not have an instance, so for them this use of local
variable 0 is unnecessary. A class method starts
using local variables at index 0. If
the addTwo method were a class method, its
arguments would be passed in a similar way to the first
version:
static int addTwoStatic(int i, int j) {
return i + j;
}
Method int addTwoStatic(int,int) 0 iload_0 1 iload_1 2 iadd 3 ireturn
The only difference is that the method arguments appear starting in local variable 0 rather than 1.
The normal method invocation for a instance method dispatches on the
run-time type of the object. (They are virtual, in C++ terms.) Such an
invocation is implemented using the invokevirtual instruction, which
takes as its argument an index to a run-time constant pool entry
giving the internal form of the binary name of the class type of the
object, the name of the method to invoke, and that method's descriptor
(§4.3.3). To invoke
the addTwo method, defined earlier as an instance
method, we might write:
int add12and13() {
return addTwo(12, 13);
}
Method int add12and13() 0 aload_0 // Push local variable 0 (this) 1 bipush 12 // Push int constant 12 3 bipush 13 // Push int constant 13 5 invokevirtual #4 // Method Example.addtwo(II)I 8 ireturn // Return int on top of operand stack; // it is the int result of addTwo()
The invocation is set up by
first pushing a reference to the current instance, this, on to the
operand stack. The method invocation's arguments, int values 12 and
13, are then pushed. When the frame for
the addTwo method is created, the arguments passed
to the method become the initial values of the new frame's local
variables. That is, the reference for this and the two arguments, pushed
onto the operand stack by the invoker, will become the initial values
of local variables 0, 1,
and 2 of the invoked method.
Finally, addTwo is
invoked. When it returns, its int return value is pushed onto the
operand stack of the frame of the invoker,
the add12and13 method. The return value is thus put
in place to be immediately returned to the invoker of
add12and13.
The return
from add12and13 is handled by the ireturn
instruction of add12and13. The ireturn
instruction takes the int value returned
by addTwo, on the operand stack of the current
frame, and pushes it onto the operand stack of the frame of the
invoker. It then returns control to the invoker, making the invoker's
frame current. The Java Virtual Machine provides distinct return instructions for
many of its numeric and reference data types, as well as a return
instruction for methods with no return value. The same set of return
instructions is used for all varieties of method invocations.
The operand of the invokevirtual instruction (in the example, the run-time constant pool index #4) is not the offset of the method in the class instance. The compiler does not know the internal layout of a class instance. Instead, it generates symbolic references to the methods of an instance, which are stored in the run-time constant pool. Those run-time constant pool items are resolved at run-time to determine the actual method location. The same is true for all other Java Virtual Machine instructions that access class instances.
Invoking
addTwoStatic, a class (static) variant
of addTwo, is similar, as shown:
int add12and13() {
return addTwoStatic(12, 13);
}
although a different Java Virtual Machine method invocation instruction is used:
Method int add12and13() 0 bipush 12 2 bipush 13 4 invokestatic #3 // Method Example.addTwoStatic(II)I 7 ireturn
Compiling an invocation of a class (static) method is very much like
compiling an invocation of an instance method, except this is not
passed by the invoker. The method arguments will thus be received
beginning with local variable 0
(§3.6). The invokestatic instruction is always
used to invoke class methods.
The invokespecial instruction must be used to invoke instance
initialization methods (§3.8). It is also used
when invoking methods in the superclass (super). For instance, given classes
Near and Far declared as:
class Near {
int it;
int getItNear() {
return it;
}
}
class Far extends Near {
int getItFar() {
return super.getItNear();
}
}
The method Far.getItFar (which invokes a superclass
method) becomes:
Method int getItFar() 0 aload_0 1 invokespecial #4 // Method Near.getItNear()I 4 ireturn
Note that methods called using the invokespecial instruction always
pass this to the invoked method as its first argument. As usual, it
is received in local variable 0.
To invoke the target of a
method handle, a compiler must form a method descriptor that records
the actual argument and return types. A compiler may not perform
method invocation conversions on the arguments; instead, it must push
them on the stack according to their own unconverted types. The
compiler arranges for a reference to the method handle object to be pushed
on the stack before the arguments, as usual. The compiler emits an
invokevirtual instruction that references a descriptor which
describes the argument and return types. By special arrangement with
method resolution (§5.4.3.3), an invokevirtual
instruction which invokes the invokeExact or invoke methods of
java.lang.invoke.MethodHandle will always link, provided the method descriptor is
syntactically well-formed and the types named in the descriptor can be
resolved.
Java Virtual Machine class instances are
created using the Java Virtual Machine's new instruction. Recall that at the level
of the Java Virtual Machine, a constructor appears as a method with the
compiler-supplied name <init>. This specially named method is known as
the instance initialization method
(§2.9). Multiple instance initialization
methods, corresponding to multiple constructors, may exist for a given
class. Once the class instance has been created and its instance
variables, including those of the class and all of its superclasses,
have been initialized to their default values, an instance
initialization method of the new class instance is invoked. For
example:
Object create() {
return new Object();
}
Method java.lang.Object create()
0 new #1 // Class java.lang.Object
3 dup
4 invokespecial #4 // Method java.lang.Object.<init>()V
7 areturn
Class instances are passed and
returned (as reference types) very much like numeric values, although type
reference has its own complement of instructions, for example:
int i; // An instance variable
MyObj example() {
MyObj o = new MyObj();
return silly(o);
}
MyObj silly(MyObj o) {
if (o != null) {
return o;
} else {
return o;
}
}
Method MyObj example()
0 new #2 // Class MyObj
3 dup
4 invokespecial #5 // Method MyObj.<init>()V
7 astore_1
8 aload_0
9 aload_1
10 invokevirtual #4 // Method Example.silly(LMyObj;)LMyObj;
13 areturn
Method MyObj silly(MyObj)
0 aload_1
1 ifnull 6
4 aload_1
5 areturn
6 aload_1
7 areturn
The fields of a class instance
(instance variables) are accessed using the getfield and putfield
instructions. If i is an instance variable of type
int, the methods setIt
and getIt, defined as:
void setIt(int value) {
i = value;
}
int getIt() {
return i;
}
Method void setIt(int) 0 aload_0 1 iload_1 2 putfield #4 // Field Example.i I 5 return Method int getIt() 0 aload_0 1 getfield #4 // Field Example.i I 4 ireturn
As with the operands of method invocation instructions, the operands of the putfield and getfield instructions (the run-time constant pool index #4) are not the offsets of the fields in the class instance. The compiler generates symbolic references to the fields of an instance, which are stored in the run-time constant pool. Those run-time constant pool items are resolved at run-time to determine the location of the field within the referenced object.
Java Virtual Machine arrays are also objects. Arrays are created and manipulated using a distinct set of instructions. The newarray instruction is used to create an array of a numeric type. The code:
void createBuffer() {
int buffer[];
int bufsz = 100;
int value = 12;
buffer = new int[bufsz];
buffer[10] = value;
value = buffer[11];
}
Method void createBuffer() 0 bipush 100 // Push int constant 100 (bufsz) 2 istore_2 // Store bufsz in local variable 2 3 bipush 12 // Push int constant 12 (value) 5 istore_3 // Store value in local variable 3 6 iload_2 // Push bufsz... 7 newarray int // ...and create new int array of that length 9 astore_1 // Store new array in buffer 10 aload_1 // Push buffer 11 bipush 10 // Push int constant 10 13 iload_3 // Push value 14 iastore // Store value at buffer[10] 15 aload_1 // Push buffer 16 bipush 11 // Push int constant 11 18 iaload // Push value at buffer[11]... 19 istore_3 // ...and store it in value 20 return
The anewarray instruction is used to create a one-dimensional array of object references, for example:
void createThreadArray() {
Thread threads[];
int count = 10;
threads = new Thread[count];
threads[0] = new Thread();
}
Method void createThreadArray()
0 bipush 10 // Push int constant 10
2 istore_2 // Initialize count to that
3 iload_2 // Push count, used by anewarray
4 anewarray class #1 // Create new array of class Thread
7 astore_1 // Store new array in threads
8 aload_1 // Push value of threads
9 iconst_0 // Push int constant 0
10 new #1 // Create instance of class Thread
13 dup // Make duplicate reference...
14 invokespecial #5 // ...for Thread's constructor
// Method java.lang.Thread.<init>()V
17 aastore // Store new Thread in array at 0
18 return
The anewarray instruction can also be used to create the first dimension of a multidimensional array. Alternatively, the multianewarray instruction can be used to create several dimensions at once. For example, the three-dimensional array:
int[][][] create3DArray() {
int grid[][][];
grid = new int[10][5][];
return grid;
}
Method int create3DArray()[][][] 0 bipush 10 // Push int 10 (dimension one) 2 iconst_5 // Push int 5 (dimension two) 3 multianewarray #1 dim #2 // Class [[[I, a three-dimensional // int array; only create the // first two dimensions 7 astore_1 // Store new array... 8 aload_1 // ...then prepare to return it 9 areturn
The first operand of the
multianewarray instruction is the run-time constant pool index to
the array class type to be created. The second is the number of
dimensions of that array type to actually create. The multianewarray
instruction can be used to create all the dimensions of the type, as
the code for create3DArray shows. Note that the
multidimensional array is just an object and so is loaded and returned
by an aload_1 and areturn instruction, respectively. For
information about array class names, see
§4.4.1.
All arrays have associated lengths, which are accessed via the arraylength instruction.
Compilation of switch
statements uses the tableswitch and lookupswitch instructions. The
tableswitch instruction is used when the cases of the switch can
be efficiently represented as indices into a table of target
offsets. The default target of the switch is used if the value of
the expression of the switch falls outside the range of valid
indices. For instance:
int chooseNear(int i) {
switch (i) {
case 0: return 0;
case 1: return 1;
case 2: return 2;
default: return -1;
}
}
Method int chooseNear(int) 0 iload_1 // Push local variable 1 (argument i) 1 tableswitch 0 to 2: // Valid indices are 0 through 2 0: 28 // If i is 0, continue at 28 1: 30 // If i is 1, continue at 30 2: 32 // If i is 2, continue at 32 default:34 // Otherwise, continue at 34 28 iconst_0 // i was 0; push int constant 0... 29 ireturn // ...and return it 30 iconst_1 // i was 1; push int constant 1... 31 ireturn // ...and return it 32 iconst_2 // i was 2; push int constant 2... 33 ireturn // ...and return it 34 iconst_m1 // otherwise push int constant -1... 35 ireturn // ...and return it
The Java Virtual Machine's tableswitch and
lookupswitch instructions operate only on int data. Because
operations on byte, char, or short values are internally
promoted to int, a switch whose expression evaluates to one of those
types is compiled as though it evaluated to type int. If the
chooseNear method had been written using type
short, the same Java Virtual Machine instructions would have been generated as when
using type int. Other numeric types must be narrowed to type int
for use in a switch.
Where the cases of the
switch are sparse, the table representation of the tableswitch
instruction becomes inefficient in terms of space. The lookupswitch
instruction may be used instead. The lookupswitch instruction pairs
int keys (the values of the case labels) with target offsets in a
table. When a lookupswitch instruction is executed, the value of the
expression of the switch is compared against the keys in the
table. If one of the keys matches the value of the expression,
execution continues at the associated target offset. If no key
matches, execution continues at the default target. For instance,
the compiled code for:
int chooseFar(int i) {
switch (i) {
case -100: return -1;
case 0: return 0;
case 100: return 1;
default: return -1;
}
}
looks just like the code for
chooseNear, except for the lookupswitch
instruction:
Method int chooseFar(int) 0 iload_1 1 lookupswitch 3: -100: 36 0: 38 100: 40 default: 42 36 iconst_m1 37 ireturn 38 iconst_0 39 ireturn 40 iconst_1 41 ireturn 42 iconst_m1 43 ireturn
The Java Virtual Machine specifies that the table of the lookupswitch instruction must be sorted by key so that implementations may use searches more efficient than a linear scan. Even so, the lookupswitch instruction must search its keys for a match rather than simply perform a bounds check and index into a table like tableswitch. Thus, a tableswitch instruction is probably more efficient than a lookupswitch where space considerations permit a choice.
The Java Virtual Machine has a large complement of instructions that manipulate the contents of the operand stack as untyped values. These are useful because of the Java Virtual Machine's reliance on deft manipulation of its operand stack. For instance:
public long nextIndex() {
return index++;
}
private long index = 0;
Method long nextIndex() 0 aload_0 // Push this 1 dup // Make a copy of it 2 getfield #4 // One of the copies of this is consumed // pushing long field index, // above the original this 5 dup2_x1 // The long on top of the operand stack is // inserted into the operand stack below the // original this 6 lconst_1 // Push long constant 1 7 ladd // The index value is incremented... 8 putfield #4 // ...and the result stored in the field 11 lreturn // The original value of index is on top of // the operand stack, ready to be returned
Note that the Java Virtual Machine never allows its operand stack manipulation instructions to modify or break up individual values on the operand stack.
Exceptions are thrown from
programs using the throw keyword. Its compilation is simple:
void cantBeZero(int i) throws TestExc {
if (i == 0) {
throw new TestExc();
}
}
Method void cantBeZero(int)
0 iload_1 // Push argument 1 (i)
1 ifne 12 // If i==0, allocate instance and throw
4 new #1 // Create instance of TestExc
7 dup // One reference goes to its constructor
8 invokespecial #7 // Method TestExc.<init>()V
11 athrow // Second reference is thrown
12 return // Never get here if we threw TestExc
Compilation of try-catch
constructs is straightforward. For example:
void catchOne() {
try {
tryItOut();
} catch (TestExc e) {
handleExc(e);
}
}
Method void catchOne() 0 aload_0 // Beginning of try block 1 invokevirtual #6 // Method Example.tryItOut()V 4 return // End of try block; normal return 5 astore_1 // Store thrown value in local var 1 6 aload_0 // Push this 7 aload_1 // Push thrown value 8 invokevirtual #5 // Invoke handler method: // Example.handleExc(LTestExc;)V 11 return // Return after handling TestExc Exception table: From To Target Type 0 4 5 Class TestExc
Looking more closely, the
try block is compiled just as it would be if the try were not
present:
Method void catchOne() 0 aload_0 // Beginning of try block 1 invokevirtual #6 // Method Example.tryItOut()V 4 return // End of try block; normal return
If no exception is thrown
during the execution of the try block, it behaves as though the
try were not there: tryItOut is invoked
and catchOne returns.
Following the try block is
the Java Virtual Machine code that implements the single catch clause:
5 astore_1 // Store thrown value in local var 1 6 aload_0 // Push this 7 aload_1 // Push thrown value 8 invokevirtual #5 // Invoke handler method: // Example.handleExc(LTestExc;)V 11 return // Return after handling TestExc Exception table: From To Target Type 0 4 5 Class TestExc
The invocation
of handleExc, the contents of the catch clause,
is also compiled like a normal method invocation. However, the
presence of a catch clause causes the compiler to generate an
exception table entry (§2.10,
§4.7.3). The exception table for
the catchOne method has one entry corresponding to
the one argument (an instance of class TestExc)
that the catch clause of catchOne can handle. If
some value that is an instance of TestExc is thrown
during execution of the instructions between
indices 0 and 4
in catchOne, control is transferred to the Java Virtual Machine
code at index 5, which implements the block of
the catch clause. If the value that is thrown is not an instance of
TestExc, the catch clause
of catchOne cannot handle it. Instead, the value is
rethrown to the invoker of catchOne.
A try may have multiple
catch clauses:
void catchTwo() {
try {
tryItOut();
} catch (TestExc1 e) {
handleExc(e);
} catch (TestExc2 e) {
handleExc(e);
}
}
Multiple catch clauses of a
given try statement are compiled by simply appending the Java Virtual Machine code
for each catch clause one after the other and adding entries to the
exception table, as shown:
Method void catchTwo() 0 aload_0 // Begin try block 1 invokevirtual #5 // Method Example.tryItOut()V 4 return // End of try block; normal return 5 astore_1 // Beginning of handler for TestExc1; // Store thrown value in local var 1 6 aload_0 // Push this 7 aload_1 // Push thrown value 8 invokevirtual #7 // Invoke handler method: // Example.handleExc(LTestExc1;)V 11 return // Return after handling TestExc1 12 astore_1 // Beginning of handler for TestExc2; // Store thrown value in local var 1 13 aload_0 // Push this 14 aload_1 // Push thrown value 15 invokevirtual #7 // Invoke handler method: // Example.handleExc(LTestExc2;)V 18 return // Return after handling TestExc2 Exception table: From To Target Type 0 4 5 Class TestExc1 0 4 12 Class TestExc2
If during the execution of
the try clause (between indices 0
and 4) a value is thrown that matches the
parameter of one or more of the catch clauses (the value is an
instance of one or more of the parameters), the first (innermost) such
catch clause is selected. Control is transferred to the Java Virtual Machine code
for the block of that catch clause. If the value thrown does not
match the parameter of any of the catch clauses
of catchTwo, the Java Virtual Machine rethrows the value without
invoking code in any catch clause
of catchTwo.
Nested try-catch
statements are compiled very much like a try statement with multiple
catch clauses:
void nestedCatch() {
try {
try {
tryItOut();
} catch (TestExc1 e) {
handleExc1(e);
}
} catch (TestExc2 e) {
handleExc2(e);
}
}
Method void nestedCatch() 0 aload_0 // Begin try block 1 invokevirtual #8 // Method Example.tryItOut()V 4 return // End of try block; normal return 5 astore_1 // Beginning of handler for TestExc1; // Store thrown value in local var 1 6 aload_0 // Push this 7 aload_1 // Push thrown value 8 invokevirtual #7 // Invoke handler method: // Example.handleExc1(LTestExc1;)V 11 return // Return after handling TestExc1 12 astore_1 // Beginning of handler for TestExc2; // Store thrown value in local var 1 13 aload_0 // Push this 14 aload_1 // Push thrown value 15 invokevirtual #6 // Invoke handler method: // Example.handleExc2(LTestExc2;)V 18 return // Return after handling TestExc2 Exception table: From To Target Type 0 4 5 Class TestExc1 0 12 12 Class TestExc2
The nesting of catch
clauses is represented only in the exception table. The Java Virtual Machine does not
enforce nesting of or any ordering of the exception table entries
(§2.10). However, because try-catch
constructs are structured, a compiler can always order the entries of
the exception handler table such that, for any thrown exception and
any program counter value in that method, the first exception handler
that matches the thrown exception corresponds to the innermost
matching catch clause.
For instance, if the
invocation of tryItOut (at
index 1) threw an instance
of TestExc1, it would be handled by the catch
clause that invokes handleExc1. This is so even
though the exception occurs within the bounds of the outer catch
clause (catching TestExc2) and even though that
outer catch clause might otherwise have been able to handle the
thrown value.
As a subtle point, note that
the range of a catch clause is inclusive on the "from" end and
exclusive on the "to" end (§4.7.3). Thus, the
exception table entry for the catch clause
catching TestExc1 does not cover the return
instruction at offset 4. However, the exception
table entry for the catch clause
catching TestExc2 does cover the return
instruction at offset 11. Return instructions
within nested catch clauses are included in the range of
instructions covered by nesting catch clauses.
(This section assumes a
compiler generates class files with version number 50.0 or below, so
that the jsr instruction may be used. See also
§4.10.2.5.)
Compilation of a
try-finally statement is similar to that of try-catch. Prior
to transferring control outside the try statement, whether that
transfer is normal or abrupt, because an exception has been thrown,
the finally clause must first be executed. For this simple
example:
void tryFinally() {
try {
tryItOut();
} finally {
wrapItUp();
}
}
Method void tryFinally() 0 aload_0 // Beginning of try block 1 invokevirtual #6 // Method Example.tryItOut()V 4 jsr 14 // Call finally block 7 return // End of try block 8 astore_1 // Beginning of handler for any throw 9 jsr 14 // Call finally block 12 aload_1 // Push thrown value 13 athrow // ...and rethrow value to the invoker 14 astore_2 // Beginning of finally block 15 aload_0 // Push this 16 invokevirtual #5 // Method Example.wrapItUp()V 19 ret 2 // Return from finally block Exception table: From To Target Type 0 4 8 any
There are four ways for
control to pass outside of the try statement: by falling through the
bottom of that block, by returning, by executing a break or
continue statement, or by raising an
exception. If tryItOut returns without raising an
exception, control is transferred to the finally block using a jsr
instruction. The jsr 14 instruction at
index 4 makes a "subroutine call" to the code for
the finally block at index 14 (the finally
block is compiled as an embedded subroutine). When the finally block
completes, the ret 2 instruction returns
control to the instruction following the jsr instruction at
index 4.
In more detail, the
subroutine call works as follows: The jsr instruction pushes the
address of the following instruction (return at
index 7) onto the operand stack before
jumping. The astore_2 instruction that is the jump target stores the
address on the operand stack into local
variable 2. The code for the finally block (in
this case the aload_0 and invokevirtual instructions) is
run. Assuming execution of that code completes normally, the ret
instruction retrieves the address from local
variable 2 and resumes execution at that
address. The return instruction is executed,
and tryFinally returns normally.
A try statement with a
finally clause is compiled to have a special exception handler, one
that can handle any exception thrown within the try statement. If
tryItOut throws an exception, the exception table
for tryFinally is searched for an appropriate
exception handler. The special handler is found, causing execution to
continue at index 8. The astore_1 instruction
at index 8 stores the thrown value into local
variable 1. The following jsr instruction does
a subroutine call to the code for the finally block. Assuming that
code returns normally, the aload_1 instruction at
index 12 pushes the thrown value back onto the
operand stack, and the following athrow instruction rethrows the
value.
Compiling a try statement
with both a catch clause and a finally clause is more
complex:
void tryCatchFinally() {
try {
tryItOut();
} catch (TestExc e) {
handleExc(e);
} finally {
wrapItUp();
}
}
Method void tryCatchFinally() 0 aload_0 // Beginning of try block 1 invokevirtual #4 // Method Example.tryItOut()V 4 goto 16 // Jump to finally block 7 astore_3 // Beginning of handler for TestExc; // Store thrown value in local var 3 8 aload_0 // Push this 9 aload_3 // Push thrown value 10 invokevirtual #6 // Invoke handler method: // Example.handleExc(LTestExc;)V 13 goto 16 // This goto is unnecessary, but was // generated by javac in JDK 1.0.2 16 jsr 26 // Call finally block 19 return // Return after handling TestExc 20 astore_1 // Beginning of handler for exceptions // other than TestExc, or exceptions // thrown while handling TestExc 21 jsr 26 // Call finally block 24 aload_1 // Push thrown value... 25 athrow // ...and rethrow value to the invoker 26 astore_2 // Beginning of finally block 27 aload_0 // Push this 28 invokevirtual #5 // Method Example.wrapItUp()V 31 ret 2 // Return from finally block Exception table: From To Target Type 0 4 7 Class TestExc 0 16 20 any
If the try statement
completes normally, the goto instruction at
index 4 jumps to the subroutine call for the
finally block at index 16. The finally block
at index 26 is executed, control returns to the
return instruction at index 19,
and tryCatchFinally returns normally.
If tryItOut throws an
instance of TestExc, the first (innermost)
applicable exception handler in the exception table is chosen to
handle the exception. The code for that exception handler, beginning
at index 7, passes the thrown value
to handleExc and on its return makes the same
subroutine call to the finally block at index
26 as in the normal case. If an exception is not
thrown by handleExc,
tryCatchFinally returns normally.
If tryItOut throws a value
that is not an instance of TestExc or
if handleExc itself throws an exception, the
condition is handled by the second entry in the exception table, which
handles any value thrown between indices 0 and
16. That exception handler transfers control to
index 20, where the thrown value is first stored
in local variable 1. The code for the finally
block at index 26 is called as a subroutine. If
it returns, the thrown value is retrieved from local
variable 1 and rethrown using the athrow
instruction. If a new value is thrown during execution of the
finally clause, the finally clause aborts,
and tryCatchFinally returns abruptly, throwing the
new value to its invoker.
Synchronization in the Java Virtual Machine is implemented by monitor entry and exit, either explicitly (by use of the monitorenter and monitorexit instructions) or implicitly (by the method invocation and return instructions).
For code written in the
Java programming language, perhaps the most common form of synchronization is the
synchronized method. A synchronized method is not normally
implemented using monitorenter and monitorexit. Rather, it is
simply distinguished in the run-time constant pool by the
ACC_SYNCHRONIZED flag, which is checked by the method invocation
instructions (§2.11.10).
The monitorenter and
monitorexit instructions enable the compilation of synchronized
statements. For example:
void onlyMe(Foo f) {
synchronized(f) {
doSomething();
}
}
Method void onlyMe(Foo) 0 aload_1 // Push f 1 dup // Duplicate it on the stack 2 astore_2 // Store duplicate in local variable 2 3 monitorenter // Enter the monitor associated with f 4 aload_0 // Holding the monitor, pass this and... 5 invokevirtual #5 // ...call Example.doSomething()V 8 aload_2 // Push local variable 2 (f) 9 monitorexit // Exit the monitor associated with f 10 goto 18 // Complete the method normally 13 astore_3 // In case of any throw, end up here 14 aload_2 // Push local variable 2 (f) 15 monitorexit // Be sure to exit the monitor! 16 aload_3 // Push thrown value... 17 athrow // ...and rethrow value to the invoker 18 return // Return in the normal case Exception table: From To Target Type 4 10 13 any 13 16 13 any
The compiler ensures that at any method invocation completion, a monitorexit instruction will have been executed for each monitorenter instruction executed since the method invocation. This is the case whether the method invocation completes normally (§2.6.4) or abruptly (§2.6.5). To enforce proper pairing of monitorenter and monitorexit instructions on abrupt method invocation completion, the compiler generates exception handlers (§2.10) that will match any exception and whose associated code executes the necessary monitorexit instructions.
The representation of
annotations in class files is described in
§4.7.16-§4.7.22. These
sections make it clear how to represent annotations on declarations of
classes, interfaces, fields, methods, method parameters, and type
parameters, as well as annotations on types used in those
declarations. Annotations on package declarations require additional
rules, given here.
When the compiler encounters
an annotated package declaration that must be made available at run
time, it emits a class file with the following properties:
The class file represents an interface, that is, the
ACC_INTERFACE and ACC_ABSTRACT flags of the ClassFile
structure are set (§4.1).
If the class file version number is less than 50.0, then the
ACC_SYNTHETIC flag is unset; if the class file version
number is 50.0 or above, then the ACC_SYNTHETIC flag is
set.
The interface's name is the internal form
(§4.2.1) of
package-name.package-info.
The interface's only members are those implied by The Java Language Specification, Java SE 24 Edition (JLS §9.2).
The annotations on the package declaration are stored as
RuntimeVisibleAnnotations and RuntimeInvisibleAnnotations
attributes in the attributes table of the ClassFile
structure.
A compilation unit that contains a module declaration (JLS §7.7) is
compiled to a class file that contains a Module attribute.
By convention, the name of a compilation unit that contains a module
declaration is module-info.java, echoing
the package-info.java convention for a compilation
unit that contains solely a package declaration. Consequently, by
convention, the name for the compiled form of a module declaration
is module-info.class.
A flag in the access_flags item of the ClassFile
structure, ACC_MODULE (0x8000), indicates that this class file
declares a module. ACC_MODULE plays a similar role to
ACC_ANNOTATION (0x2000) and ACC_ENUM (0x4000) in flagging this
class file as "not an ordinary class". ACC_MODULE does
not describe accessibility of a class or
interface.
The Module attribute is explicit about the module's dependences;
there are no implicit requires directives at the ClassFile
level. If the requires_count item is zero, then the
Java SE Platform does not infer the existence of
a requires table nor any particular entry
therein. java.base is the only module in which a
zero requires_count is legal, because it is the
primordial module. For every other module, the Module attribute must
have a requires table of at least length one,
because every other module depends on java.base. If a compilation
unit contains a module declaration (except java.base) that does not
state its dependence on java.base explicitly, then a compiler must
emit an entry for java.base in the requires table
and flag it as ACC_MANDATED to denote that it was implicitly
declared.
For encapsulation, the Module attribute is explicit about the
packages exported and opened by a normal module; there are no implicit
exports or opens directives at the ClassFile level for a normal
module. If the exports_count item or
opens_count item is zero, then the Java SE Platform does
not infer the existence of
an exports table or opens table,
nor any particular entry therein. On the other hand, for an open
module, the Module attribute is implicit about the packages opened
by the module. All packages of an open module are opened to all other
modules, even though the opens_count item is
zero.
The Module attribute is explicit about the module's consumption and
provision of services; there are no implicit uses or provides
directives at the ClassFile level.